Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn
20.6K posts

Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

💔💔💔😡😡😡😡😡😡😡
HOW MANY MORE TIMES DO WE HAVE TO SEE THIS BEFORE SOMETHING FINALLY CHANGES??? 😡😡😡
This evening in Clonmel, people sat in their cars, helpless, horrified, watching a horse collapse on a public road, a trap/sulky still attached. An animal pushed beyond its limits, then dragged back up and forced to keep going as if its suffering meant nothing. This isn’t just neglect. This is cruelty, in plain sight, in modern Ireland.
And yet it keeps happening. 😡
This happened at the roundabout at the Bulmers Factory, Clonmel, Tipperary 💔💔😡😡
We are angry. We are heartbroken. We are ashamed that in a country that claims to value animal welfare, this is still allowed to continue on our roads. Laws mean nothing without enforcement. Words mean nothing without action.
To those in power: how many videos, how many witnesses, how many broken or dead animals will it take before you act?
We are calling for:
A dedicated An Garda Síochána Animal Crime Unit with real authority and resources.
Immediate enforcement of existing animal welfare laws
A clear, enforceable ban on the use of horses in these conditions on public roads
This is not tradition. This is not culture. This is suffering 😡
We will not stay silent. We will not look away. And we will not stop demanding change until this cruelty ends.
Enough is enough! 😡😡😡😡😡😡
@agriculture_ie @gardainfo
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Long term follow up of a phase 1
trial of an mRNA tumor vaccine shows that 7/8 patients with pancreatic cancer, who mounted an immune response to the vaccine, are still alive 6 years later. This is breathtaking data and shows the promise of mRNA vaccines. nbcnews.com/health/cancer/…
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Is this what certain politicians encourage when they fail to condemn attacks on our Gardai?
😡😡😡😡
"Both gardaí in the rammed and severely damaged patrol car, a male and a female, remain in Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital Drogheda this evening."
rte.ie/news/2026/0416…
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Jennifer Horgan: “Angry men's blockades stopped my mother being with her dying brother-in-law last week. She was not the only vulnerable person whose needs were trampled on” irishexaminer.com/opinion/column…
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Where would we be without top journalists like @paraicobrien and the team at @Channel4News…
Channel 4 News@Channel4News
Channel 4 News was at the scene of an airstrike in Lebanon that hit near a hospital just moments after a team of paramedics attended a funeral for one of their colleagues in Nabatieh. It comes as President Trump has announced that a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon will begin later tonight. More than a million people have been displaced by the Israeli invasion of the south, while airstrikes have struck across the country, targeting villages and major cities.
Zaventem, België 🇧🇪 English
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

there’s a special place in heII reserved for these trophy hunters
timi@Timiii360
Local villagers said he was a 2 year old elephant. In his death he folded his legs as if he were still a baby.
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Marie-Thérèse is 86 years old.
Handcuffed. Wrists and ankles.
Sitting in an ICE detention facility in Louisiana with roughly 70 other detainees.
She has heart problems. She has a bad back.
Her children in France didn’t know where she was for a week.
Here’s why:
Sixty years ago she fell in love with an American soldier. They lost each other. They found each other again.
They got married. Billy was a retired U.S. Army colonel.
Billy died in January.
Marie-Thérèse had a green card application pending.
Then there was an inheritance dispute with Billy’s son.
Billy’s son reportedly called ICE.
DHS called her “an illegal alien from France.”
This is what we’re doing to the 86-year-old widow of an American veteran.
What exactly are we protecting?
#DemsUnited #Veterans

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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Ésto no es divertido, las aves luchan contra los drones que amenazan su nido, sin duda las hélices dañan sus alas y sus patas; nos falta mucha educación y conciencia para respetar y cuidar la vida silvestre..
#wildlife
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

Steve Tunison killed this magnificent cat with Chris du Plooy Safaris. Would like to wipe that smirk from his face. Despicable being. 🤬
#BanTrophyHunting RT
@SARA2001NOOR @Angelux1111 @Lin11W @Gail7175 @Protect_Wldlife @PhaedraXTeddy

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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул
Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

A young girl is her family’s sole survivor from an Israel airstrike. A baby is recovering from head injuries in another. The number of child casualties in Lebanon is abnormally high, doctors say. With @GarwenM @CunninghamCSky @Jeehad_jn @waeltaleb23
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Antonina Ni Dhuinn ретвитнул

WHAT ICU NURSES KNOW ABOUT THE LAST HOURS OF LIFE THAT FAMILIES ARE NEVER PREPARED FOR:
1. Hearing is the last sense to go. Many patients can hear everything being said in the room long after they appear unconscious. Nurses know this. Most families do not act like it.
2. The body does not shut down all at once. It withdraws blood and oxygen from the extremities first, working inward toward the heart. The cold hands and feet you notice are the body making a final decision about what to protect.
3. A sudden, unexpected improvement in energy and alertness hours before death is not a good sign. Nurses recognize it immediately. Families almost always mistake it for recovery.
4. The sound called the death rattle is not pain. It is simply the throat relaxing and losing muscle control. But no amount of medical explanation prepares a family for hearing it for the first time.
5. Most people do not die during the night. The body has a biological rhythm and many deaths occur in the early hours of morning, between 3am and 5am, when the nervous system is at its lowest.
6. Patients often wait. Nurses have watched people hold on for days until a specific person arrives, or a specific word is spoken, or permission is quietly given to let go. It happens too consistently to be coincidence.
7. The words "we did everything we could" are sometimes true and sometimes the most painful half-truth a family will ever receive without knowing it.
8. Families who are not present at the moment of death carry guilt that no counselor fully resolves. Nurses see this guilt begin forming in real time and cannot always stop it.
9. The face relaxes completely at the moment of death in a way that is impossible to describe until you have seen it. Nurses say it looks like the person finally put something down they had been carrying for a very long time.
10. Many ICU nurses privately believe that the most painful deaths are not the ones with the most physical suffering. They are the ones where the patient dies surrounded by family members who are fighting with each other.
11. The thing families almost never say, but almost always should, is simply this: it is okay to go. Those four words, spoken out loud, do something that medicine cannot explain and nurses have witnessed more times than they can count.
12. Nurses grieve too. They learn the names, the histories, the family dynamics, and the small personal details of every patient. They cry in break rooms, in parking lots, and on drives home. Then they walk back in the next morning and do it all over again, because someone has to, and they chose to be that person.
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